EXCLUSIVE - Luka Rocco Magnotta Documentary Online NOW!

The story of a secret group of online investigators who tracked Magnotta for almost two years

A year ago virtually no one knew anything about a young man named Luka Magnotta. Then came the horrifying discovery of the body of Jun Lin in Montreal, followed by a feverish international manhunt and then the arrest in Berlin. Luka Magnotta now stands charged with the murder of the young Concordia University student from China.

The name Luka Magnotta seemed to appear from nowhere in May of this year. But if he was unknown to the wider public, for 18 months before his arrest, he was being tracked... by a group of Internet users who were horrified over videos they believed he'd made, which depicted the killing of kittens and apparent threats to do worse. In an exclusive interview with Mark Kelley, the online investigators share for the first time the details their attempts to chase Magnotta down through the deep web and alert authorities as they tried to stop a man they considered dangerous.

The hundreds of cryptic online postings Luka Magnotta uploaded to the web paint an unsettling psychological portrait of a disturbed young man who shocked the world to its core, and reveal much about his life growing up as Eric Newman. But Magnotta would disclose much more to the few people who knew him personally, two of whom share their stories exclusively with the fifth estate. What became apparent to everyone who knew him is that Magnotta appeared to have an obsessive narcissistic need to be noticed, and exhibited increasingly erratic, possibly threatening behaviour online, ringing alarm bells for those who knew him and watched his chilling story unfold.

Watch below NOW!

by Anonymous

reply 4

05/10/2013

update

by Anonymous

reply 1

02/13/2013

Luka Magnotta's murder trial is set for Sept. 15, 2014. Although that date is more than two years after his arrest in connection with the death of Jun Lin, that is not an unusual amount of time for a high-profile murder case to reach the trial stage.

Some have questioned why it takes so long for cases like Magnotta's to get to court. Lukatrial.com, for example, the popular website that has been following the case from the beginning, says, "I will never understand how we can delay justice for so long in a case like this."

The key determinant in most cases has to do with judicial resources, rather than issues related to the defence or the prosecution.

Ottawa criminal lawyer Ian Carter told CBC News that the 16-month delay between the preliminary hearing and Magnotta's trial before judge and jury is not unusual. A trial like Magnotta's "is normally set that far in advance because they need to find a courtroom and a judge."

The Magnotta trial is expected to last six to eight weeks, a relatively big block of court time. The court facilities, the judge, the lawyers and the witnesses all need to be available at the same time, and there are always other trials in the queue competing for timeslots.

Luka Rocco Magnotta, is escorted off a plane from Germany by Montreal police in Mirabel, June 18, 2012. His jury trial is scheduled to begin two years, three months after that date. (SPVM/Reuters ) In the Magnotta case, his lawyer, Luc Leclair, had requested an earlier start date — April 2014 — but last week Justice Andre Vincent said September was the earliest possibility. "It's a busy courthouse," Leclair told reporters, adding, "I'm not completely surprised."

Reasonable time There are others factors as well that play a role in setting the date. The starting point is the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which states, "Any person charged with an offence has the right ... to be tried within a reasonable time."

Section 11 of the Charter is also the one that says anyone charged should "be presumed innocent until proven guilty."

A defendant who is to be tried by a superior court judge alone or a judge and jury usually has the right to a preliminary hearing. Magnotta's wrapped up April 12 with an order to stand trial for first-degree murder and four other charges.

Carter says Magnotta's preliminary hearing happened relatively quickly. "In terms of judicial resources, there's a longer period of delay from the initial charge to the preliminary inquiry than there is between the preliminary and the superior court trial."

Criminal lawyer Ian Carter says the reason Magnotta's trial won't begin until September 2014 is likely because a judge and a courtroom are not available before then. (CBC) "Technically, the preliminary is there to serve as a screening mechanism to see if there is some evidence of the offence you've been charged with, [but] in the vast majority of cases there's no argument about committal to stand trial," Carter said.

Where that does happen, sometimes, is in murder cases, with an argument over whether the charge should be first- or second-degree murder or manslaughter. Leclair argued unsuccessfully that Magnotta should be tried for second-degree.

However, Carter explained that the reality with preliminary inquiries is that, "In the vast majority of cases it's used by the defence as discovery-type process, to get information about certain parts of the crown's case," and to get an idea of how witnesses will perform in the courtroom.

The Crown can avoid a preliminary inquiry by getting the attorney general to approve a direct indictment.

The decision to do so is made unilaterally by the prosecutors and the defence has no ability to argue against it. Last year, the Crown got a direct indictment in a terrorism case in which Carter is representing one of the accused, Misbahuddin Ahmed, who was arrested in 2010. In that case, the jury trial won't begin until April 2014.

The availability of the lawyers for both sides, and the witnesses, is also taken into account when setting a trial date. Once the available date for a judg

by Anonymous

reply 2

05/10/2013

I have now idea why but Luka Magnotti popped into my mind this afternoon. Eerie.

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